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Year Two - Silicate 5&6
April 2008 |
Garry Fabian MillerMuch of Fabian Miller’s early work was landscape based. He gained international acclaim in the 1970’s for his photographs of sky, land and sea, particularly for the series titled Sea Horizons of England that were first shown at the Arnolfini Gallery in 1979. Since 1985 he has made camera-less images, essentially abstract photography without camera or film, exploring the possibilities of image making with light itself. His methods look back to the early pioneers of photography in the 1830s and 1840s, passing light through objects - especially plants - or through filters of oil or coloured water onto photo-sensitive paper. In his return to basics, the fundamentals of form and colour, his work looks back to these early pioneers, but it also looks forward. Fabian Miller has a deserved reputation as one of the most progressive artists working with photography today. Links for Garry Fabian Miller
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